[Rhodes22-list] An opportunity to become a Rhodie for little down

Graham Stewart gstewart8 at cogeco.ca
Sat Jun 6 16:57:50 EDT 2020


You don't restore a boat in order to have a boat. You restore a boat because you want t restore a boat. The pleasure is in the process. Otherwise it will never get completed - the worst of all outcomes.

Graham Stewart
Agile, Rodes 22, 1976
Kingston Ontario
-----Original Message-----
From: Rhodes22-list [mailto:rhodes22-list-bounces at rhodes22.org] On Behalf Of Ric Stott
Sent: Saturday, June 6, 2020 8:44 AM
To: Scott Andrews; The Rhodes 22 Email List
Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] An opportunity to become a Rhodie for little down

If one buys a boat that needs work, two things must be true. 
1. One must enjoy the challenge of the task at hand. 
2. One must have the time, space, tools and talents to make it happen. 
I agree that you can’t substitute sailing time for repair time, but there is nothing more gratifying than sailing a boat that you brought back to life. 
Ric
Dadventure
HBNY

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 6, 2020, at 7:27 AM, Scott Andrews via Rhodes22-list <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org> wrote:
> 
> Well said.
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
>> On Jun 5, 2020, at 4:48 PM, S/V Lark <Colealexander at hotmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Its not just the Rhodes.   
>> 
>> Sailing forums lament over the cost of rebuilding old boats and the failure
>> of the dreamers to anticipate the cost.   At the same time there is
>> continued mocking of 'overpriced' used boats when another boat of the same
>> design and vintage is being sold for pennies on the dollar (because it needs
>> a complete rebuild).   
>> 
>> I felt no guilt for paying the Stan Premium for a fully reconditioned boat.   
>> I could have bought a cheap boat of various designs, spent all my time
>> slowly rebuilding it and thousands on parts and mistakes.  The only money I
>> would have saved is four years of routine repairs and maintenance.   That
>> budget would have been zero, since the boat would still be in refit.   Three
>> cruises and well over a hundred day (or night) sails wouldn't have happened
>> yet.   IMO a fully fitted out boat is far more valuable then the market will
>> admit, unless you have free time, skill and a willingness to spend your days
>> working on a boat instead of your dayjob.   
>> 
>> Best of luck finding a buyer that values solid decks instead of silicone
>> goobered never rebedded fittings.
>> 
>> Alex
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -----
>> Alex Cole
>> S/V Lark
>> --
>> Sent from: http://rhodes-22.1065344.n5.nabble.com/
> 



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